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Oct 1, 2012
10/12
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and if people stop trusting u.s. treasuries, the $16 trillion of debt we have out there, interest rates are going to skyrocket, interest payments will go up annually potentially by hundreds of billions of dollars, then we would have more deficit, there would be less trust. and so you haven't -- you've wrecked the government's role in the economy. those are my secret notes, i'm going to ping -- pick them up. [laughter] so you have to stabilize that. and you have to figure out a way to get the economy to grow. and that's a long-term proposition which will lead to more jobs. but you're right, there's some contradictions in all of this. but in trying to create more jobs, you can't mess up with the overall problem of the trustworthiness and creditworthiness. you're shaking your head. we'll talk afterwards. next. >> hi. over the course of your career, you've had the most incredible access to all these, um, great politicians in history and even today, and i was just wondering out of everyone you've met, who surprised you th
and if people stop trusting u.s. treasuries, the $16 trillion of debt we have out there, interest rates are going to skyrocket, interest payments will go up annually potentially by hundreds of billions of dollars, then we would have more deficit, there would be less trust. and so you haven't -- you've wrecked the government's role in the economy. those are my secret notes, i'm going to ping -- pick them up. [laughter] so you have to stabilize that. and you have to figure out a way to get the...
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Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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on the impeachment -- on the day of the impeachment vote in the u.s. senate, as the senate is voting she is having a three-hour meeting with the campaign team about the new york campaign. in many respects she goes back and becomes the person she was as a student. a centrist building bridges, listening to people, finding out they want what they want to have happen in new york. she becomes incredibly successful united states senator. she bilged bridges. her best friends -- not her best friends, john mccain lindsay graham. so so there now in a different place. bill managing to come back, he always was an effective economic president. he almost redeems himself by bringing peace to the middle east, she is off doing incredibly important work in new york. but her life is more independent than his. and she becomes in a sense an independent person one more time. they are still together. they still are in love. but now she's the person in charge and it's her career that is at stake. we have never had this kind of story in the american white house. we have never
on the impeachment -- on the day of the impeachment vote in the u.s. senate, as the senate is voting she is having a three-hour meeting with the campaign team about the new york campaign. in many respects she goes back and becomes the person she was as a student. a centrist building bridges, listening to people, finding out they want what they want to have happen in new york. she becomes incredibly successful united states senator. she bilged bridges. her best friends -- not her best friends,...
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Oct 22, 2012
10/12
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this interview was recorded at the u.s. naval academy. .. >> how does that dominate campaign coverage with issues or performance of candidates. >> host: start with the media. mitt romney 47% and barack obama guns and religion. >> this morning i just ran 47%. how many media outlets? dozen last one day wore one week or one month? guns was relatively short. three weeks. mitt romney 47% we have not seen the end of it. it is about one month. the stories drop-off but they are drug backend by opponents or events. i am sure coming out of the presidential debate they will wonder if he will respond to that. at issue which gaf we need to pay attention to. represent a character flaw or the incapacity to act? or just normal things? >> if they are hanging out in the public with the internet, youtube distributed more broadly and quickly is the hour cable -- archival capability we can see what barack obama said 1998. were mitt romney by the way not one bit of coverage of 47% in may. there was a fund-raising event but nobody pulled the stor
this interview was recorded at the u.s. naval academy. .. >> how does that dominate campaign coverage with issues or performance of candidates. >> host: start with the media. mitt romney 47% and barack obama guns and religion. >> this morning i just ran 47%. how many media outlets? dozen last one day wore one week or one month? guns was relatively short. three weeks. mitt romney 47% we have not seen the end of it. it is about one month. the stories drop-off but they are drug...
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Oct 8, 2012
10/12
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but it's not as though the u.s. economy could outsource everything because they would have no income to buy anything. so there will always be a u.s. economy but it will become increasingly that local service economy. i think there's also want other misunderstanding which is prior to 2000, 85% of the lost manufacturing jobs were from domestic productivity gains, not from offshore and. and since 2000 would've been an increasing trade deficit it's about 67% has come from productivity gains. i think of it a bit as agriculture. food was 25% of gdp. it fell to 10. that power and the productivity gains in manufacturing today powered the growth in the service economy. >> host: just to stay manufactured for second. the 1 dollar versus $19 i'm not sure it is, that is one type of manufacturing, and in many areas u.s. workers are much more productive so i think the reason we so they're pretty robust, albeit declining manufacturing sector is there are a lot of areas where u.s. workers are way more productive. so the difference i
but it's not as though the u.s. economy could outsource everything because they would have no income to buy anything. so there will always be a u.s. economy but it will become increasingly that local service economy. i think there's also want other misunderstanding which is prior to 2000, 85% of the lost manufacturing jobs were from domestic productivity gains, not from offshore and. and since 2000 would've been an increasing trade deficit it's about 67% has come from productivity gains. i...
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Oct 22, 2012
10/12
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i start in the u.s., enof the u.s., and i feel as the this story is particularly needed in the united states. i don't believe that people in pakistan or china need to hear this because they see it. even a grown up like pakistan struggled. there's so much potential. it's the noangs growth style. if i had enough resources, i wouldn't tell people that and reap my dividends forever sharing it with other people. it is on the cusp of happening. very exciting. there's really three people in the country, and it's for anybody who believes there's possibility in the future and wonder why it's not happening more quickly. >> why are china, india, pack tan, why are they where they are economically if they are on the cusp? what's beginning not right in those countries that's going right here in the united states. >> well, pakistan does not have the moe men them of china and -- >> host: take brazil. >> guest: again, highly growing, evolved, but the thing that con trains growth in every country, and the simple -- you know, i go to places like the world bank, and if i'm invited to share thoughts with
i start in the u.s., enof the u.s., and i feel as the this story is particularly needed in the united states. i don't believe that people in pakistan or china need to hear this because they see it. even a grown up like pakistan struggled. there's so much potential. it's the noangs growth style. if i had enough resources, i wouldn't tell people that and reap my dividends forever sharing it with other people. it is on the cusp of happening. very exciting. there's really three people in the...
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Oct 21, 2012
10/12
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on the day of the impeachment in the u.s. senate she is having a meeting with a campaign team about the new york campaign. in many respects she goes back and becomes the person she was as a student at yale, a centrist, a consensus person building bridges, listening to people, finding out what they want to have happen. she becomes incredibly successful. she builds bridges. among her best friends are john mccain and lindsey graham. so they are now in a very different place. he always was an effective economic president and almost redeems himself by bringing peace to the middle east. she is off doing incredibly important work in new york and she becomes an independent person one more time. they are still together, they still are in love but now she is the person in charge and her career is at stake. we have never had this kind of story in the american white house. we have never had this kind of personal chemistry, personal chemistry which both incredibly enriches our understanding of what to face during those years and also leav
on the day of the impeachment in the u.s. senate she is having a meeting with a campaign team about the new york campaign. in many respects she goes back and becomes the person she was as a student at yale, a centrist, a consensus person building bridges, listening to people, finding out what they want to have happen. she becomes incredibly successful. she builds bridges. among her best friends are john mccain and lindsey graham. so they are now in a very different place. he always was an...
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Oct 15, 2012
10/12
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first president to be elected under the system we know well, in which the candidates attracted to a u.s. and new hampshire, and they submit their feet to the will of the people. and in a series of primaries and caucuses they are the chairs and nominees are selected. before jimmy carter, presidential candidates were chosen by insiders at the national conventions. and they could run in the primaries and the caucus but they didn't necessarily have to. it was an inside game. presidents now must raise a lot of money to take their money to their case to the people in the way that they didn't need to before. and in terms of the travel and the president's focusing on the key states, you have presidents now who are key to the political success taking their case to the people and now that you're in the office, they have continued to do so as president.o in the book i talk about examples of the presidential aide saying when a president needs to get back to his winning a game or does he want to do? he wants to go back to the people and the have and to do it in the key electoral states that better
first president to be elected under the system we know well, in which the candidates attracted to a u.s. and new hampshire, and they submit their feet to the will of the people. and in a series of primaries and caucuses they are the chairs and nominees are selected. before jimmy carter, presidential candidates were chosen by insiders at the national conventions. and they could run in the primaries and the caucus but they didn't necessarily have to. it was an inside game. presidents now must...
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Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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today, today, my books sit on the self-on-- shelf of the u.s. library of congress, the largest library in the world. today -- [applause] today, high schools right across the nation, from east to west, from north to south, fill my e-mail inbox with speaking requests. today, my message of inspiration is broadcast into the living rooms of over 100 million households right across the continental united states. that's what happens when you put your mind to something. that's what happens when your audience is open and disinterested in reputation or conformity and committed to intrijism and the act of being bold. today, the idolized american can count friends on just one hand. uncompromising and simplistic convictions like the jewellistic belief in good and evil, in righteousness and wickedness, make him a marked man. clarity is the enemy of the highly sensitized and the meek. silence, even in disagreement, is their friend. to them, your and my hour contributions are not only up welcome, but they are temperament and furry. from illinois to missouri and
today, today, my books sit on the self-on-- shelf of the u.s. library of congress, the largest library in the world. today -- [applause] today, high schools right across the nation, from east to west, from north to south, fill my e-mail inbox with speaking requests. today, my message of inspiration is broadcast into the living rooms of over 100 million households right across the continental united states. that's what happens when you put your mind to something. that's what happens when your...
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Oct 6, 2012
10/12
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the stimulus almost double the domestic content of u.s. wind turbines and also doubled the u.s. and production. we are hearing about this crazy stimulus that shoveled money to the president's cronies. there hasn't been a single example of a corrupt deal. in this book probably the first real case of inappropriate political pressure was valerie jarrett summoning energy department official to the situation room to get to approve a loan but when the guy resisted the white house backed off and incidentally, the call on solyndra and there was no pressure on that one. we are moving into another election about change. the central question is whether government is capable of contributing to positive change. the stimulus is exhibit a for the republican argument which is weird because it really ought to be exhibit a for the argument that it can. i realize i sound like an obama cheerleader. it is an extremely uncomfortable role for me and there's a theme for the end of the book where i am talking to joe biden who oversaw the stimulus. he let me sit in on a cabinet meeting devoted to the sti
the stimulus almost double the domestic content of u.s. wind turbines and also doubled the u.s. and production. we are hearing about this crazy stimulus that shoveled money to the president's cronies. there hasn't been a single example of a corrupt deal. in this book probably the first real case of inappropriate political pressure was valerie jarrett summoning energy department official to the situation room to get to approve a loan but when the guy resisted the white house backed off and...
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Oct 28, 2012
10/12
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the case eventually goes to the u.s. supreme court. rendell wins a quarter of a million dollars which is an extraordinary amount of money, a tenth of the value of the cnd canal, and builds a mansion overlooking the canal which is eventually built exactly on the lines he had suggested and that wright claimed was wrong. it goes down to collect tolls, which is how he collected his quarter million dollars because the canal company didn't willingly pay off its -- the judgment against them. in any case, there are other aspects of the book that i think are new material which i don't think we have time to go into here. you have the very long competition between new york and virginia about which state will get west first, and it's been talked about in other erie books, but i think i stress it in this one that for decades, george washington and thomas jefferson who owned land in the ohio river valley, speculators of land, had desperately tried to find a way to get the river to improve the river and get it to go over the mountains and off to the
the case eventually goes to the u.s. supreme court. rendell wins a quarter of a million dollars which is an extraordinary amount of money, a tenth of the value of the cnd canal, and builds a mansion overlooking the canal which is eventually built exactly on the lines he had suggested and that wright claimed was wrong. it goes down to collect tolls, which is how he collected his quarter million dollars because the canal company didn't willingly pay off its -- the judgment against them. in any...
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Oct 14, 2012
10/12
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today my book sits on the selwyn -- the shelf of the u.s. library of congress largest library in the world. [applause] in today high-school across the nation north to south minyanville my in box with speaking request. this is being broadcast into the living rooms of 100 million households across the continental united states. that is what happens when the audience is open and committed to individuals. today americans that can count as true friends such as the jule listed believe between good and evil with a witness making the mark demand. clarity is the enemy of the meek. silence of the disagreement is there friend. to them, the contributions are not on the and will come but tim britcom at irritable and inflammatory. from the prairies of illinois to the riverbanks of missouri, there is rightfully no conformity. from an early age american child is unaccompanied. they'll be uniform america wears americans understand the simple arithmetic that which groupthink delivers mediocrity, individualism drives innovation and creativity. ladies and gentl
today my book sits on the selwyn -- the shelf of the u.s. library of congress largest library in the world. [applause] in today high-school across the nation north to south minyanville my in box with speaking request. this is being broadcast into the living rooms of 100 million households across the continental united states. that is what happens when the audience is open and committed to individuals. today americans that can count as true friends such as the jule listed believe between good...
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Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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and the archbishop of canterbury -- >> american hostages in lebanon and initially i was asked by the u.s. authority not to visit the united states while there were hostages in lebanon because there were negotiations to get them out and they didn't want to. to be fair, the day the last american hostage was freed and brought to safety the americans said there was no longer a problem. i could come whenever i wanted. they kept their word. this is the thing about meeting strange people. there is an official. don't know if he does the job now but there is an official probably in washington who is the counterterrorism chief, that is an official which holds the rank of ambassador, the job is so secret that while he is doing the job, you can't say where he lives and can't describe any of his movements and yet he runs the whole counterterrorism operation of the united states and i met three of them, these invisible men. i could write one hell of a spy novel. it was one of them who asked me not to visit the united states and another of them who said i could come and i was able to come the first tim
and the archbishop of canterbury -- >> american hostages in lebanon and initially i was asked by the u.s. authority not to visit the united states while there were hostages in lebanon because there were negotiations to get them out and they didn't want to. to be fair, the day the last american hostage was freed and brought to safety the americans said there was no longer a problem. i could come whenever i wanted. they kept their word. this is the thing about meeting strange people. there...
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Oct 13, 2012
10/12
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and u.s. tim, do you believe in this, this, this. they say, yes to yes, yes. well, you know, your a feminist. the label is a problem. many women don't want to use the label, don't want to send signals that are associated with the label because they know their is a group of voters out there who don't see it the way it our generation sought. >> time for one last question, i think. you have had your hand of says the very beginning of the q&a session. >> how does rate and is this the -- at this city intersects? are there additional challenges the woman of color might face? >> you know, when shirley ran for president she in 1972 said that voters were more sexist and racist. i think that thinking still holding chair today. and not sure of my colleagues have a sense of idea on that. you mentioned nikky haley having an ethnic advantage combe. kaifu. >> i don't want to expand on that. this is a difficult question because if people of color want to say no, i think that in politics ethnicity and race are no less of an issue. at the sexual orientation is a big issue. that
and u.s. tim, do you believe in this, this, this. they say, yes to yes, yes. well, you know, your a feminist. the label is a problem. many women don't want to use the label, don't want to send signals that are associated with the label because they know their is a group of voters out there who don't see it the way it our generation sought. >> time for one last question, i think. you have had your hand of says the very beginning of the q&a session. >> how does rate and is this...
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Oct 27, 2012
10/12
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much to do about the u.s. supreme court. it is a chilling line that you might expect to find in a dystopian charlton heston film. corporations are people. it is a confiscated decision, but it allows businesses to stop putting politicians on layaway and start purchasing outright of bed bath and integrity around the corner. the side effect of turning more than 30 million businesses and people overnight is the 17% increase in the u.s. population. already reeling from high unemployment and increasingly scarce resources. who will care for these new humans? small businesses now have the legal protection enjoyed by dwarves and abercrombie and fitch -- who will defend target from the nra? come on. challenges cannot be met by the current infrastructure and we have no choice but to reduce the actual numbers by officially declaring a portion of them to be a corporation. in cooperation with henderson family of albany, new york, we have already begun a test program to help mrs. henderson transition her loving household into a streamlined
much to do about the u.s. supreme court. it is a chilling line that you might expect to find in a dystopian charlton heston film. corporations are people. it is a confiscated decision, but it allows businesses to stop putting politicians on layaway and start purchasing outright of bed bath and integrity around the corner. the side effect of turning more than 30 million businesses and people overnight is the 17% increase in the u.s. population. already reeling from high unemployment and...
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Oct 27, 2012
10/12
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he gets nominated to go washington as the boys mitigation candidate for u.s. senate. goes to washington. he is already already six feet tall. he strides to the front of the line when they go to the white house is the president kennedy and when kennedy finishes his speech, bill clinton goes forward and gets his picture taken alongside of john kennedy. he is so proud, he is so proud and he is already dedicated to the idea that he's going to be the person is going to bring complete honor to the family. by the age of 17 he is already planning to be elected attorney general and then governor of arkansas and president of the united states. this is something which everyone had knows him knows about it because he talks about it all the time. he goes to georgetown and from georgetown he becomes the a candidate for the roads fellowship and goes to oxford. he is an incredible success everywhere but he cannot have a sustained ongoing relationship with a woman. he is attracted to the kind of women his mother directs them to who are the beauty queens, who are flirtatious, who are a
he gets nominated to go washington as the boys mitigation candidate for u.s. senate. goes to washington. he is already already six feet tall. he strides to the front of the line when they go to the white house is the president kennedy and when kennedy finishes his speech, bill clinton goes forward and gets his picture taken alongside of john kennedy. he is so proud, he is so proud and he is already dedicated to the idea that he's going to be the person is going to bring complete honor to the...